U.S. Department of Homeland Security United States Coast Guard
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U.S. Department of Homeland Security United States Coast Guard LOCAL NOTICE TO MARINERS District: 11 Week: 30/19 CORRESPONDENCE TO: COMMANDER DISTRICT ELEVEN (DPW) COAST GUARD ISLAND BUILDING 50-2 ALAMEDA, CA 94501-5100 REFERENCES: COMDTPUB P16502.6, Light List Volume VI, 2017 Edition, U.S. Chart No.1 12th Edition, and Coast Pilot Volume 7 49th Edition. These publications, along with corrections, are available at: https://nauticalcharts.noaa.gov/ BROADCAST NOTICE TO MARINERS - Information concerning aids to navigation and waterway management promulgated through BNM HB-0018-19, SF-0084-19, LA-0097-19, and SD-0052-19 have been incorporated in this notice, or will continue if still significant. SECTION I - SPECIAL NOTICES This section contains information of special concern to the Mariner. SUBMITTING INFORMATION FOR PUBLICATION IN THE LOCAL NOTICE TO MARINERS A complete set of guidelines with examples and contact information can be found at http://www.pacificarea.uscg.mil/Our-Organization/District- 11/Prevention-Division/LnmRequest/ or call BM1 Silvestre Suga at 510-437-2980 or e-mail [email protected]. Please provide all Local Notice to Mariners submissions 14 days prior to the start of operations. BRIDGE INFORMATION- PROJECTS, DISCREPANCIES, CORRECTIONS & REGULATORY For all bridge related issues, including lighting, operation, obstructions, construction, demolition, etc. contact the Eleventh Coast Guard District Bridge Administrator 24 hour cell phone at 510-219-4366. Flotsam may accumulate on and near bridge piers and abutments. Mariners should approach all bridges with caution. A vessel delay at a drawbridge may be reported to the District Bridge Administrator by telephone, or by using the Delay_Report_11-2017.pdf included in the Enclosures section of this Local Notice to Mariners. BRIDGE INFORMATION-COMMUNICATIONS PROTOCOL-BENICIA/MARTINEZ UPRR BRIDGE- CARQUINEZ STRAIT All mariners requiring a bridge lift at the Benicia-Martinez Union Pacific Railroad Bridge, mile 7.0, over the Carquinez Strait, California, should follow the protocol in the document entitled “Coordination of Communications for Union Pacific Railroad Lift Operations." Mariners can download a copy of the document by selecting the link BENICIA-MARTINEZ RR BRIDGE under the QUICK LINKS section at https://www.pacificarea.uscg.mil/vtssf. CAUTION TO BE USED IN RELIANCE UPON AIDS TO NAVIGATION The aids to navigation depicted on charts comprise a system of fixed and floating aids to navigation with varying degrees of reliability. Prudent mariners will not rely solely on any single aid to navigation, particularly a floating aid to navigation. With respect to buoys, the buoy symbol is used to indicate the approximate position of the buoy body and the sinker which secures the buoy to the seabed. The approximate position is used because of the practical limitations in positioning and maintaining buoys and their sinkers in precise geographical locations. These limitations include, but are not limited to, inherent imprecision in position fixing methods, prevailing atmospheric and sea conditions, slope of and the material making up the seabed, the fact that buoys are moored to sinkers by varying length of chain, and the fact that the buoy body and/or sinker positions are not under continuous surveillance, but are normally checked only during periodic maintenance visits which often occur more than a year apart. Due to the forces of nature, the position of the buoy body can be expected to shift inside and outside the charted symbol. The mariner is also cautioned that buoys may be extinguished or sound signals may not function as the result of natural causes, collisions, or other accidents. For the foregoing reasons, a prudent mariner must not rely completely upon the position or operation of floating aids to navigation, but will also utilize bearings from fixed objects and aids to navigation on shore. Furthermore, a vessel attempting to pass close aboard always risks collision with a yawing buoy or with the obstruction that the buoy marks. FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION ISSUES ENFORCEMENT ADVISORY ON NON-COMPLIANT AIS DEVICES Automatic identification system (AIS) is designed to mitigate collisions and enhance situational awareness by exchanging real time vessel Page 1 of 25 LNM: 30/19 Coast Guard District 11 24 July 2019 navigation information autonomously and continuously. AIS is required to be properly installed, maintained, and used-but foremost, users should ensure they are buying a true AIS and not a knock-off sold on the internet. AIS equipment that is noncompliant and noncertified to adopted international standards can confuse, degrade or even disrupt other users systems; and is illegal to be marketed, sold or used in the in the U.S. On November 28, 2018, the federal communication commission (FCC) issued an enforcement advisory HTTPS://DOCS.FCC.GOV/PUBLIC/ATTACHMENTS/DA-18-1211A1.PDF Re-iterating this to sellers, advertisers, and operators of non-certified automatic identification systems devices like those used for fish net buoys. Violator may be subject to FCC penalties, including but not limited to, substantial monetary fines of up to $19,639 per day for marketing violations and up to $147,290 for an ongoing violation. Given the potential harm these devices may have on navigation safety and the Coast Guard’s interest in all AIS devices being operated and maintained in proper order, the Coast Guard will assist the FCC in enforcement. U.S. Coast Guard type-approved devices are labeled as such and numbered, either as USCG 165.155.XXXX or 165.156.XXXX. Similarly, they will also be labeled with a FCC type-certification number. A listing of these devices can also be found on their respective authorized equipment web pages, of the USCG CGMIX at HTTPS://CGMIX.USCG.MIL/ And of FCC OET at HTTPS://APPS.FCC.GOV/OETCF/EAS/REPORTS/GENERICSEARCH.CFM. For more information on AIS, how to properly install and operate it, and the nations AIS network, visit the Coast Guard Navigation Center (NAVCEN) website at WWW.USCG.NAVCEN.GOV. LNM: 25/19 MARINE SAFETY INFORMATION BULLETIN Mariners directing the movement of large ships in or near the offshore approaches to San Francisco Bay have indicated to the Coast Guard that the high-intensity “work-lights” on decks used by commercial fishing vessels prevent vessel operators from seeing the commercial fishing vessel’s navigation lights at night and in low-visibility conditions. A clear and present threat to navigation safety exists when one vessel cannot see the navigation lights of another vessel. If navigation lights are obscured, the aspect of the latter vessel cannot be determined making it extremely difficult for both vessels to successfully execute the nautical rules of the road. International Navigation Rule 20 states that no other lights that may impair the visibility of the lights specified in the Rules shall be displayed from sunset to sunrise and during periods of low visibility. Vessels found to be in violation of Rule 20 may be subject to a potential $6,500 fine. All vessels operating near the San Francisco Bay inbound or outbound off-shore traffic lanes are strongly encouraged to comply with the Navigation Rules as they pertain to navigation lights. Vessels are also encouraged to maintain an active listening watch on VHF-FM Chan. 13 and 16, when the intentions of another vessel are unclear, communicate to make arrangements to reduce the risk of collision. Chart 18649 LNM: 45/16 NAVIGATION RISK ASSESSMENT U.S. Coast Guard is conducting Navigation Safety Risk Assessment on U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Section 10 Permit Application listed as SPL- 2016-00880-GS Seal Beach Naval Weapons Station Ammunition Pier, Causeway, and Turning Basin Project, Seal Beach, Orange Country, California. For more details or comments contact LT Ruth Sadowitz at 510-437-3801 or [email protected]. The public notice can be found here: https://www.spl.usace.army.mil/Portals/17/docs/publicnotices/SPL-2019-00331- LM_Carnival_PN.pdf?ver=2019-06-28-133609-847 LNM: 27/19 NORTHERN CALIFORNIA-SAN FRANCISCO APPROACH-SPEED REDUCTION NOAA Sanctuaries requests a voluntary Vessel Speed Reduction within the San Francisco Traffic Seperation Scheme (SF TSS) until 15 Nov 19. Vessels 300 gross registered tons or larger transiting the SF TSS (33 CFR 167.400) are encouraged to transit at speeds not in excess of 10kts. These areas contain concentrations of endangered Blue, Humpback, and Fin Whales that are protected under the Federal Endangered Species Act (16 U.S.C. 1538 et seq.), the Marine Mammal Protection Act (16 U.S.C. 1361 et seq.), and the National Marine Sanctuaries Act (16 U.S.C. 1431 et seq.), see enclosure VSRMap2019_SF.pdf. Please report any collisions with whales or any observed injured or dead whales to NOAA at 877-SOS-WHALe (877-767-9425) or to the U.S. Coast Guard on VHF-FM Chan. 16. NOAA is asking for the public’s help in tracking whales. Please report sightings through WhaleAlert, a free application available at http://westcoast.whalealert.org. Charts: 18640 18680 LNM: 17/19 SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA- DANA POINT TO POINT ARGUELLO - VOLUNTARY SPEED REDUCTION NOAA Voluntary Whale Advisory Vessel Speed Reduction Zone to reduce the impact of ship strikes on whales - NOAA strongly recommends that vessels 300 gross registered tons or larger transiting the Whale Advisory Zone do so at speeds not in excess of 10 knots. These areas contain populations of endangered blue, humpback, and fin whales that are federally protected under the Federal Endangered Species Act (16 USC 1538 et seq.), the Marine Mammal Protection Act (16 USC 1361 et seq.), and the National Marine Sanctuaries Act (16 USC 1431 et seq.). The NOAA Voluntary Whale Advisory Zone extends from approximately Dana Point to Pt. Arguello and vessels are requested to transit at 10 knots Page 2 of 25 LNM: 30/19 Coast Guard District 11 24 July 2019 or less anywhere in this zone, see enclosure VSRMap2019_SC.pdf.